Hi
I use SQL Servers 2000 SP3 on Windows 2000 Advanced Server
SP4. I've set up a transactional replication w/o updating
between two servers, one of which is a publisher and the
other is a distributor/pull-subscriber. I wonder if SQL
Server has means of finding out how much data was
replicated (i.e. sent to the subscriber), say, during the
day. If it hasn't, are there any third-party tools, which
would allow me to do this?
Many thanks,
Oskcheck the replication monitor in EM it will display a "gross" level of
information processed by article published.
"Osk" wrote:
> Hi
> I use SQL Servers 2000 SP3 on Windows 2000 Advanced Server
> SP4. I've set up a transactional replication w/o updating
> between two servers, one of which is a publisher and the
> other is a distributor/pull-subscriber. I wonder if SQL
> Server has means of finding out how much data was
> replicated (i.e. sent to the subscriber), say, during the
> day. If it hasn't, are there any third-party tools, which
> would allow me to do this?
> --
> Many thanks,
> Osk
>|||Hi
What do you mean by "gross" level? I need to know how much
bytes were delivered to the subscriber during a time interval.
Thanks,
Osk
>--Original Message--
>check the replication monitor in EM it will display a
"gross" level of
>information processed by article published.
>"Osk" wrote:
>
>.
>
Showing posts with label serversp4. Show all posts
Showing posts with label serversp4. Show all posts
Friday, March 9, 2012
Find out how much data was replicated
Hi
I use SQL Servers 2000 SP3 on Windows 2000 Advanced Server
SP4. I've set up a transactional replication w/o updating
between two servers, one of which is a publisher and the
other is a distributor/pull-subscriber. I wonder if SQL
Server has means of finding out how much data was
replicated (i.e. sent to the subscriber), say, during the
day. If it hasn't, are there any third-party tools, which
would allow me to do this?
Many thanks,
Osk
check the replication monitor in EM it will display a "gross" level of
information processed by article published.
"Osk" wrote:
> Hi
> I use SQL Servers 2000 SP3 on Windows 2000 Advanced Server
> SP4. I've set up a transactional replication w/o updating
> between two servers, one of which is a publisher and the
> other is a distributor/pull-subscriber. I wonder if SQL
> Server has means of finding out how much data was
> replicated (i.e. sent to the subscriber), say, during the
> day. If it hasn't, are there any third-party tools, which
> would allow me to do this?
> --
> Many thanks,
> Osk
>
|||Hi
What do you mean by "gross" level? I need to know how much
bytes were delivered to the subscriber during a time interval.
Thanks,
Osk
>--Original Message--
>check the replication monitor in EM it will display a
"gross" level of
>information processed by article published.
>"Osk" wrote:
>.
>
I use SQL Servers 2000 SP3 on Windows 2000 Advanced Server
SP4. I've set up a transactional replication w/o updating
between two servers, one of which is a publisher and the
other is a distributor/pull-subscriber. I wonder if SQL
Server has means of finding out how much data was
replicated (i.e. sent to the subscriber), say, during the
day. If it hasn't, are there any third-party tools, which
would allow me to do this?
Many thanks,
Osk
check the replication monitor in EM it will display a "gross" level of
information processed by article published.
"Osk" wrote:
> Hi
> I use SQL Servers 2000 SP3 on Windows 2000 Advanced Server
> SP4. I've set up a transactional replication w/o updating
> between two servers, one of which is a publisher and the
> other is a distributor/pull-subscriber. I wonder if SQL
> Server has means of finding out how much data was
> replicated (i.e. sent to the subscriber), say, during the
> day. If it hasn't, are there any third-party tools, which
> would allow me to do this?
> --
> Many thanks,
> Osk
>
|||Hi
What do you mean by "gross" level? I need to know how much
bytes were delivered to the subscriber during a time interval.
Thanks,
Osk
>--Original Message--
>check the replication monitor in EM it will display a
"gross" level of
>information processed by article published.
>"Osk" wrote:
>.
>
Labels:
advanced,
database,
hii,
ive,
microsoft,
mysql,
oracle,
replicated,
replication,
server,
servers,
serversp4,
sp3,
sql,
transactional,
updatingbetween,
windows
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